Saved Events

Saved Stories

Custom Lists

Friends

Stats

Recent Comments

My perfect plate: pork from the Country Club of Little Rock; Reno's Pale Ale mac and cheese; greens from A Father and A Chef; kimchi from The Root; potato salad from The Capital Hotel, all washed down with a Schlafly Pale Ale. (note: Local Lime was out of food by the time we arrived, so I didn't get to sample anything of theirs.) Overall, it was a really great event. Loved the tunes by Bonnie Montgomery, too.

If we're talking fast food, I like McDonald's fries, hands-down. Specifically, the fries at the new midtown McDonald's on North University. When it comes to local restaurants, I love the fries at The Buffalo Grill and Gadwall's Grill (in NLR). The Faded Rose also has some pretty good potato wedges which are great for dunking in rayyynch dressing.

@walker22 - I recently had dinner at CB&G and *almost* ordered the trout; I was torn between the rainbow trout and fried catfish. I asked the server which one to order, and she said the catfish, so I went with it; it was sooo good. They use rice flour, so it's more lightly fried, and it's topped with diced pickled green tomatoes and served with a jalapeño cornbread muffin. I think about that plate of food a lot; I believe I could eat it every day.

Smith's bill would render any state-supported institution of higher education ineligible for state funding if it adopts a "sanctuary policy ... whether formally enacted or informally adopted."

Longtime KARK anchor Beth Ward died last night from complications of heart surgery, according to a report from THV11.

I am frustrated and angry with those who claim the only chance of future success is for the Democratic Party, especially in the South and Midwest, to abandon speaking directly to women and people of color and the LGBT community and instead focus on the economy and other "more comfortable" topics in order to win back some of the center.

The Times' coverage of the case since 1994.

Airport expansion, empty lots and Little Rock's fading East End.

Contrary to Tea Party fantasies, it wasn't plucky private entrepreneurs who paved the roads, strung the wire, saved grandpa from penury and made organized commerce across the rural South possible. It was federal and state investment.